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Show us your pb swiss tools!

Boring_toast

New member
Joined
Nov 20, 2020
Messages
4
Location
PNW
They don’t work that well I’m afraid! At least not as well as the others.

I have very few of the Swissgrips, and they are really not good in dirty environments. Grease and grime gets ground in, they’re hard to clean, and then they pick up grit. They last o.k. if you keep em clean, but they don’t wipe down easily, and they’re not nice to use.

They’re great in a clean environment. Fine for electronics, o.k. for woodworking, just not great for automotive work - at least on the sort of vehicles I work on!

The Multicraft handles (same shape, but hard CAB) are better. The classic handles better still, as they don’t have the texture of the Multicraft.

What would be better still would be a opaque hard material, but PB Swiss, love ‘em as I do, are just not designed for an automotive (or heavy engineering) environment.


Bummer, that's pretty much what I figured. Guess they're the Sunday screwdrivers lol
 
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macgee

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Joined
Jan 11, 2014
Messages
2,834
Location
Sepulveda Pass, CA
Out of curiosity, how does the swissgrip hold up to dirty hands? I'm not talking full on grease, but they look like anything more than home electronics work would tear them up. Do they have some longevity when working in not pristine enviroments?


Sorry, only just now saw your question.

I'll echo what the others have said.

My soft grips are a bit of a love/hate relationship. The santoprene grip does get stained, mine haven't gotten chewed up; I've had them since 2017 and use them almost everyday but I'm also kind to them and generally never chew grips up. I have other drivers I pull out for the ugly rambo work.

I've tried cleaning them but there's some small black stains from grime that wont come out (I think you can see them in my pics earlier).

If you're working on dirty grease monkey type jobs or filthy machines, then these might not be the best for you. If you're assembling new high end custom fabricated F1 parts, then these are the right drivers for you. I don't think home electronics would be too bad, PB Swiss is very popular in hollywood film camera manufacturing companies and camera operators. I use them on custom fabricated items but also on older machines that have some oil on them that come in for tuning and work and thats where mine can get dirty but generally items go through a whole de-greasing cleaning process before they enter the work space and get worked on.
 
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Pexto

Well-known member
Joined
May 5, 2018
Messages
638
I like that PB Swiss bike tool kit. I have the Victorinox branded version; it's identical but can sometimes be found for much less money.
 

Steve_P

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
5,182
I'm not much of a PB fan, the prices are insane in the US, but do have these punches. I bought the metric pin punches as I needed some right away and these were all I could find- probably 10+ years ago. Not sure what they were thinking making the small diameter ones so long; they're going to bend under any resistance.
The carbide tipped punches are great. I bought some Wilde nail sets and they were totally meh; they worked but looked bad after minimal use. I don't need the bigger sizes in the PB set, but they didn't have another option at the time. These are probably 10 years old.
On the center punches, I have Starretts, so I didn't need these, but I liked the idea of the carbide tip. I used the medium sized one a bunch in the last few weeks on mild steel and it's still like new. I bought these about a year ago on a 25% off sale. Definitely recommend these.

PB.jpg
 

Dave455

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Joined
Mar 19, 2013
Messages
5,803
Location
Sussex, England
… Not sure what they were thinking making the small diameter ones so long; they're going to bend under any resistance.
PB make several types of pin punch. On the 750’s the length of the punch is proportional to the size. These are what you want for general work.491AFAB8-AAFE-4646-BAC2-8AF99B32E5A8.jpeg

The 755’s are all the same length. Not sure why, obviously a bit of a specialist tool. 8DB2FD9A-8770-4325-8CAA-8B1B20D11788.jpeg
 

jgme

Active member
Joined
May 20, 2022
Messages
29
Mostly PB Swiss now with some Vessel, old Craftsman (late 1970s to early 1980s), and Klein.

The PB Swiss screw drivers are from Tool Lady. Thanks to others here for posting about that source. They responded quickly to emails inquiring about some sets that were not listed on their site at the time. The holiday sales were great and were made use of.
Img_6123b.jpg
 
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CallumRD1

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 7, 2017
Messages
339
Location
Colorado
I picked up another bit handle to put in my travel tools and I noticed it has the same serial number as the other one I've had for months. So, apparently the numbers aren't individualized, but are production lots?

20220702_164616.jpg

20220702_164633.jpg
That is correct, they aren’t serial numbers but rather production batch numbers.
 

LOW1

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 20, 2018
Messages
2,639
Location
ontario
From time to time I think about buying a really good complete set of screwdrivers. But then reality sets in and I realize that in a short while I will be using them to open paint cans and chip out floor tile just like I have always done for the last forty years. So it's Menards house brand for me.
 
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garfieldzzz

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Joined
Jun 30, 2014
Messages
306
Location
BY
It looks like the titanium tools are discontinued.

I own an 5mm allen key myself, nice score on those, the titanium tools are really nice but not for everyday.
 

mvcorse

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2021
Messages
89
Those are awesome! I have the heavy duty bradawl and they have the same handle. I wish they made these for there screwdrivers
Yes they did. I've seen the screwdriver pictures in the "Tools from the old world" thread long ago, but can't find them anymore.
 

1320

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2018
Messages
900
Location
Arizona
Picked up 50 (!) more drivers over the holiday weekend. All came from either DRPD, Tool Lady, or PB Tools.
10F9B70E-69AA-4F49-A401-3A28262FEFD1.jpeg92C8EEF5-30E4-41B9-B6D1-48B00C396E47.jpeg

Do the yellow ESD screwdrivers have the same spongy grip feeling as the regular Swissgrip Screwdrivers or are they hard plastic? I don't have ESD screwdrivers and I think I recall reading that somewhere...
 

dukefx

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 24, 2022
Messages
387
Do the yellow ESD screwdrivers have the same spongy grip feeling as the regular Swissgrip Screwdrivers or are they hard plastic? I don't have ESD screwdrivers and I think I recall reading that somewhere...
No personal experience, but you can filter on their site and there's a "SwissGrip ESD handle" checkbox. It'll show you all the full sized handles and a mobile set.
 
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